cHAP. v] THE GOVERNOR AND THE LAW 267
statement as to the position of a Governor.! He pointed out
that no illegality had been committed by the Administrator
in signing the warrant. He thus disregarded the view of the
Chief Justice that the payment to members in excess of
the amount authorized in the Act No. 12 of 1907 was a con-
travention of the statute, and he evidently held that the
other point made by the Chief Justice, that the expenditure
could not legally be authorized by a warrant under s. 20
of the Audit Act because the necessity for such expenditure
had arisen, if at all, while Parliament was still in session,
was only an obiter dictum of the Chief Justice, and was not
a decision binding on the Administrator. He admitted,
however, that a Governor must not normally, whether
advised by ministers or not, participate in an illegal action.
Such participation could only be approved in case of most
supreme public necessity, and normally in such cases the
action would not be such as would be pronounced illegal
until after it had been taken. Moreover, the Governor had his
Attorney-General and his legal advisers, and he presumably,
not as a rule being a legal expert himself, was entitled to take
the view of the state of the law from them. That being so, he
did not think that it was reasonable or necessary to lay down
instructions for a Governor as to what he was to do if action
were proposed to him which he considered illegal, but he recog-
nized the principle that a Governor of a Colony, even when
aeting as Governor in Council, was not to regard the advice of
his ministers as having an authority superior to that of the
law, and that except in the case of the most urgent public
necessity it was his duty to refuse to approve an illegal action.
A much more serious feature of this case is the fact that
the money was paid without any Governor’s warrant at all.
Under the letters patent granting responsible government,
and under the Audit Acts, the procedure with regard to
expenditure in the Transvaal was as follows :—
All moneys received were paid into an Exchequer Account,
and expenditure was met from the Paymaster-General’s
Account, which was kept in funds by transfers from time to
time from the Exchequer Account. The transfers were only
1 House of Lords Debates, vi. 407 seq. Cf. Parl. Payp., C. 6487, p. 72.